North Carolina Administrative Code
Title 04 - COMMERCE
Chapter 11 - UTILITIES COMMISSION
Chapter 8
Article 11 - RESOURCE PLANNING AND CERTIFICATION
Section 11 R08-69 - COST RECOVERY FOR DEMAND-SIDE MANAGEMENT AND ENERGY EFFICIENCY MEASURES OF ELECTRIC
Universal Citation: 11 NC Admin Code 11 R 08-69
Current through Register Vol. 39, No. 6, September 16, 2024
(a) Definitions.
(1) Unless listed below, the definitions of
all terms used in this rule shall be as set forth in Rules R8-67 and R8-68, or
if not defined therein, then as set forth in
G.S.
62-133.8(a) and
G.S.
62-133.9(a).
(2) "DSM/EE rider" means a charge or rate
established by the Commission annually pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.9(d) to allow the
electric public utility to recover all reasonable and prudent costs incurred in
adopting and implementing new demand-side management and energy efficiency
measures after August 20, 2007, as well as, if appropriate, utility incentives,
including net lost revenues.
(3)
"Large commercial customer" means any commercial customer that has an annual
energy usage of not less than 1,000,000 kilowatt-hours (kWh), measured in the
same manner as the electric public utility that serves the commercial customer
measures energy for billing purposes.
(4) "Rate period" means the period during
which the DSM/EE rider established under this rule will be in effect. For each
electric public utility, this period will be the same as the period during
which the rider established under Rule R8-55 is in effect.
(5) "Test period" shall be the same for each
public utility as its test period for purposes of Rule R8-55, unless otherwise
ordered by the Commission.
(b) Recovery of Costs.
(1) Each year the Commission shall conduct a
proceeding for each electric public utility to establish an annual DSM/EE
rider. The DSM/EE rider shall consist of a reasonable and appropriate estimate
of the expenses expected to be incurred by the electric public utility, during
the rate period, for the purpose of adopting and implementing new demand-side
management and energy efficiency measures previously approved pursuant to Rule
R8-68. The expenses will be further modified through the use of a DSM/EE
experience modification factor (DSM/EE EMF) rider. The DSM/EE EMF rider will
reflect the difference between the reasonable expenses prudently incurred by
the electric public utility during the test period for that purpose and the
revenues that were actually realized during the test period under the DSM/EE
rider then in effect. Those expenses approved for recovery shall be allocated
to the North Carolina retail jurisdiction consistent with the system benefits
provided by the new demand-side management and energy efficiency measures and
shall be assigned to customer classes in accordance with
G.S.
62-133.9(e) and
(f).
(2) Upon the request of the electric public
utility, the Commission shall also incorporate the experienced over-recovery or
under-recovery of costs up to thirty (30) days prior to the date of the hearing
in its determination of the DSM/EE EMF rider, provided that the reasonableness
and prudence of these costs shall be subject to review in the utility's next
annual DSM/EE rider hearing.
(3)
Pursuant to
G.S.
62-130(e), any
over-collection of reasonable and prudently incurred costs to be refunded to an
electric public utility's customers through operation of the DSM/EE EMF rider
shall include an amount of interest, at such rate as the Commission determines
to be just and reasonable, not to exceed the maximum statutory rate. The
beginning date for measurement of such interest shall be the effective date of
the DSM/EE EMF rider in each annual proceeding, unless otherwise determined by
the Commission.
(4) The burden of
proof as to whether the costs were reasonably and prudently incurred shall be
on the electric public utility.
(5)
Any costs incurred for adopting and implementing measures that do not
constitute new demand-side management or energy efficiency measures are
ineligible for recovery through the annual rider established in
G.S.
62-133.9.
(6) Except as provided in (c)(3) of this
rule, each electric public utility may implement deferral accounting for costs
considered for recovery through the annual rider. At the time the Commission
approves a new demand-side management or energy efficiency measure under Rule
R8-68, the electric public utility may defer costs of adopting and implementing
the new measure in accordance with the Commission's approval order under Rule
R8-68. Subject to the Commission's review, the electric public utility may
begin deferring the costs of adopting and implementing new demand-side
management or energy efficiency measures six (6) months prior to the filing of
its application for approval under Rule R8-68, except that the Commission may
consider earlier deferral of development costs in exceptional cases, where such
deferral is necessary to develop an energy efficiency measure. Deferral
accounting, however, for any administrative costs, general costs, or other
costs not directly related to a new demand-side management or energy efficiency
measure must be approved prior to deferral. The balance in the deferral
account, net of deferred income taxes, may accrue a return at the net-of-tax
rate of return approved in the electric public utility's most recent general
rate proceeding. The return so calculated will be adjusted in any rider
calculation to reflect necessary recoveries of income taxes. This return is not
subject to compounding. The accrual of such return of on any under-recovered or
over-recovered balance set in an annual proceeding for recovery or refund
through a DSM/EE EMF rider shall cease as of the effective date of the DSM/EE
EMF rider in that proceeding, unless otherwise determined by the Commission.
However, deferral accounting of costs shall not affect the Commission's
authority under this rule to determine whether the deferred costs may be
recovered.
(c) Utility Incentives.
(1) With respect to a new
demand-side management or energy efficiency measure previously approved under
Rule R8-68, the electric public utility may, in its annual filing, apply for
recovery of any utility incentives, including, if appropriate, net lost
revenues, identified in its application for approval of the measure. The
Commission shall determine the appropriate ratemaking treatment for any such
utility incentives.
(2) When
requesting inclusion of a utility incentive in the annual rider, the electric
public utility bears the burden of proving its calculations of those utility
incentives and the justification for including them in the annual rider, either
through its measurement and verification reporting plan or through other
relevant evidence.
(3) An electric
public utility shall not be permitted to implement deferral accounting or the
accrual of a return for utility incentives unless the Commission approves an
annual rider that provides for recovery of an integrated amount of costs and
utility incentives. In that instance, the Commission shall determine the extent
to which deferral accounting and the accrual of a return will be
allowed.
(d) Special Provisions for Industrial or Large Commercial Customers.
(1) Pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.9(f), any industrial
customer or large commercial customer may notify its electric power supplier
that:
(i) it has implemented or, in
accordance with stated, quantifiable goals, will implement alternative
demand-side management or energy efficiency measures; and
(ii) it elects not to participate in
demand-side management or energy efficiency measures for which cost recovery is
allowed under
G.S.
62-133.9. Any such customer shall be exempt
from any annual rider established pursuant to this rule after the date of
notification.
(2) At the
time the electric public utility petitions for the annual rider, it shall
provide the Commission with a list of those industrial or large commercial
customers that have opted out of participation in the new demand-side
management or energy efficiency measures. The electric public utility shall
also provide the Commission with a listing of industrial or large commercial
customers that have elected to participate in new measures after having
initially notified the electric public utility that it declined to
participate.
(3) Any customer that
opts out but subsequently elects to participate in a new demand-side management
or energy efficiency measure or program loses the right to be exempt from
payment of the rider for five years or the life of the measure or program,
whichever is longer. For purposes of this subsection, "life of the measure or
program" means the capitalization period approved by the Commission to allow
the utility to recover all costs or those portions of the costs associated with
a program or measure to the extent that those costs are intended to produce
future benefits as provided in
G.S.
62-133.9(d)(1).
(e) Annual Proceeding.
(1) For each electric public utility, the
Commission shall schedule an annual rider hearing pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.9(d) to review the
costs incurred by the electric public utility in the adoption and
implementation of new demand-side management and energy efficiency measures
during the test period, the revenues realized during the test period through
the operation of the annual rider, and the costs expected to be incurred during
the rate period and shall establish annual DSM/EE and DSM/EE EMF riders to
allow the electric public utility to recover all costs found by the Commission
to be recoverable. The Commission may also approve, if appropriate, the
recovery of utility incentives, including net lost revenues, pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.9(d)(2) in the
rider.
(2) The annual rider hearing
for each electric public utility will be scheduled as soon as practicable after
the hearing held by the Commission for the electric public utility under Rule
R8-55. Except as otherwise ordered by the Commission each electric public
utility shall file its application for recovery of costs and appropriate
utility incentives at the same time that it files the information required by
Rule R8-55.
(3) The DSM/EE EMF
rider will remain in effect for a fixed 12-month period following establishment
and will continue as a rider to rates established in any intervening general
rate case proceeding.
(f) Filing Requirements and Procedure.
(1) Each electric public utility shall submit
to the Commission all of the following information and data in its application:
(i) Projected North Carolina retail monthly
kWh sales for the rate period.
(ii)
For each measure for which cost recovery is requested through the DSM/EE rider:
a. total expenses expected to be incurred
during the rate period in the aggregate and broken down by type of expenditure,
per appropriate capacity, energy and measure unit metric and the proposed
jurisdictional allocation factors;
b. total costs that the utility does not
expect to incur during the rate period as a direct result of the measure in the
aggregate and broken down by type of cost, per appropriate capacity, energy and
measure unit metric, and the proposed jurisdictional allocation factors, as
well as any changes in the estimated future amounts since last filed with the
Commission;
c. a description of the
measurement and verification activities to be conducted during the rate period,
including their estimated costs;
d.
total expected summer and winter peak demand reduction per appropriate measure
unit metric and in the aggregate;
e. total expected energy reduction in the
aggregate and per appropriate measure unit metric.
(iii) For each measure for which cost
recovery is requested through the DSM/EE EMF rider:
a. total expenses for the test period in the
aggregate and broken down by type of expenditure, per appropriate capacity,
energy and measure unit metric and the proposed jurisdictional allocation
factors;
b. total costs that the
utility did not incur for the test period as a direct result of the measure in
the aggregate and broken down by type of cost, per appropriate capacity, energy
and measure unit metric, and the proposed jurisdictional allocation factors, as
well as any changes in the estimated future amounts since last filed with the
Commission;
c. a description of,
the results of, and the costs of all measurement and verification activities
conducted in the test period;
d.
total summer and winter peak demand reduction in the aggregate and per
appropriate measure unit metric, as well as any changes in estimated future
amounts since last filed with the Commission;
e. total energy reduction in the aggregate
and per appropriate measure unit metric, as well as any changes in the
estimated future amounts since last filed with the Commission;
f. a discussion of the findings and the
results of the program or measure;
g. evaluations of event-based programs
including the date, weather conditions, event trigger, number of customers
notified and number of customers enrolled; and
h. a comparison of impact estimates presented
in the measure application from the previous year, those used in reporting for
previous measure years, and an explanation of significant differences in the
impacts reported and those previously found or used.
(iv) For each measure for which recovery of
utility incentives is requested, a detailed explanation of the method proposed
for calculating those utility incentives, the actual calculation of the
proposed utility incentives, and the proposed method of providing for their
recovery and true-up through the annual rider. If recovery of net lost revenues
is requested, the total net lost kWh sales and net lost revenues per
appropriate capacity, energy, and program unit metric and in the aggregate for
the test period, and the proposed jurisdictional allocation factors, as well as
any changes in estimated future amounts since last filed with the
Commission.
(v) Actual revenues
produced by the DSM/EE rider and the DSM/EE EMF rider established by the
Commission during the test period and for all available months immediately
preceding the rate period.
(vi) The
requested DSM/EE rider and DSM/EE EMF rider and the basis for their
determination.
(vii) Projected
North Carolina retail monthly kWh sales for the rate period for all industrial
and large commercial accounts, in the aggregate, that are not assessed the
rider charges as provided in this rule.
(viii) All workpapers supporting the
calculations and adjustments described above.
(2) Each electric public utility shall file
the information required under this rule, accompanied by workpapers and direct
testimony and exhibits of expert witnesses supporting the information filed in
this proceeding, and any change in rates proposed by the electric public
utility, by the date specified in subdivision (e)(2) of this rule. An electric
public utility may request a rider lower than that to which its filed
information suggests that it is entitled.
(3) The electric public utility shall publish
a notice of the annual hearing for two (2) successive weeks in a newspaper or
newspapers having general circulation in its service area, normally beginning
at least thirty (30) days prior to the hearing, notifying the public of the
hearing before the Commission pursuant to
G.S.
62-133.9(d) and setting
forth the time and the place of the hearing.
(4) Persons having an interest in any hearing
may file a petition to intervene at least 15 days prior to the date of the
hearing. Petitions to intervene filed less than 15 days prior to the date of
the hearing may be allowed in the discretion of the Commission for good cause
shown.
(5) The Public Staff and
other intervenors shall file direct testimony and exhibits of expert witnesses
at least 15 days prior to the hearing date. If a petition to intervene is filed
less than 15 days prior to the hearing date, it shall be accompanied by any
direct testimony and exhibits of expert witnesses the intervenor intends to
offer at the hearing.
(6) The
electric public utility may file rebuttal testimony and exhibits of expert
witnesses no later than 5 days prior to the hearing date.
NCUC Docket No. E-100, Sub 113, 2/29/08; NCUC Docket No. E-100, Sub 113, 3/13/08; NCUC Docket No. E-100, Subs 113 & 121, 1/31/11; NCUC Docket No. E-100, Sub 160, 10/11/18.
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